Re: Changing the name
От | Joshua D. Drake |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Changing the name |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 1264523370.18530.10.camel@jd-desktop.unknown.charter.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Changing the name ("Greg Sabino Mullane" <greg@turnstep.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: Changing the name
Re: Changing the name Re: Changing the name |
Список | pgsql-advocacy |
> Well, I think it's kind of sticking our heads in the ground to just say > "it's too late!" That argument has ben raised before, and the only thing > people agree upon is that it will be harder the longer we wait. > > Here's an idea: if I go a month without seeing "Postgre" or "PostgresSQL", > or having someone ask me how to pronounce it, I'll stop asking people > to make the change. :) > Or, you could accept it isn't going to happen. Core has already made the announcement that it isn't going to happen. The reality is there is a huge community that is perfectly happy with our geeky name. There is nothing stopping you or anyone else from using the term Postgres. EDB has already rebranded all their products to use it and it has affected our ability to continue as a thriving project. If you want to use the term postgres, do so. I use them interchangeably. And to be frank... PostgreSQL is a killer name. Why? Because it is an instant conversation starter... I can't count how many times I have had a conversation with someone, told them what I do and then have to explain what it is just because the name is difficult to pronounce. In short, the "problems" we have with the name are semantic. When used strategically it rocks. Joshua D. Drake -- PostgreSQL.org Major Contributor Command Prompt, Inc: http://www.commandprompt.com/ - 503.667.4564 Consulting, Training, Support, Custom Development, Engineering Respect is earned, not gained through arbitrary and repetitive use or Mr. or Sir.
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